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1.
M A Jordan  L Wilson 《Biochemistry》1990,29(11):2730-2739
We have investigated the effects of vinblastine at micromolar concentrations and below on the dynamics of tubulin exchange at the ends of microtubule-associated-protein-rich bovine brain microtubules. The predominant behavior of these microtubules at polymer-mass steady state under the conditions examined was tubulin flux, i.e., net addition of tubulin at one end of each microtubule, operationally defined as the assembly or A end, and balanced net loss at the opposite (disassembly or D) end. No dynamic instability behavior could be detected by video-enhanced dark-field microscopy. Addition of vinblastine to the microtubules at polymer-mass steady state resulted in an initial concentration-dependent depolymerization predominantly at the A ends, until a new steady-state plateau at an elevated critical concentration was established. Microtubules ultimately attained the same stable polymer-mass plateau when vinblastine was added prior to initiation of polymerization as when the drug was added to already polymerized microtubules. Vinblastine inhibited tubulin exchange at the ends of the microtubules at polymer-mass steady state, as determined by using microtubules differentially radiolabeled at their opposite ends. Inhibition of tubulin exchange occurred at concentrations of vinblastine that had very little effect on polymer mass. Both the initial burst of incorporation that occurs in control microtubule suspensions following a pulse of labeled GTP and the relatively slower linear incorporation of label that follows the initial burst were inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner by vinblastine. Both processes were inhibited to the same extent at all vinblastine concentrations examined. If the initial burst of label incorporation represents a low degree of dynamic instability (very short excursions of growth and shortening of the microtubules at one or both ends), then vinblastine inhibits both dynamic instability and flux to similar extents. The ability of vinblastine to inhibit tubulin exchange at microtubule ends in the micromolar concentration range appeared to be mediated by the reversible binding of vinblastine to tubulin binding sites exposed at the polymer ends. Determination by dilution analysis of the effects of vinblastine on the apparent dissociation rate constants for tubulin loss at opposite microtubule ends indicated that a principal effect of vinblastine is to decrease the dissociation rate constant at A ends (i.e., it produces a kinetic cap at A ends), whereas it has no effect on the D-end dissociation rate constant.  相似文献   

2.
SCG10 (superior cervical ganglia neural-specific 10 protein) is a neuron specific member of the stathmin family of microtubule regulatory proteins that like stathmin can bind to soluble tubulin and depolymerize microtubules. The direct actions of SCG10 on microtubules themselves and on their dynamics have not been investigated previously. Here, we analyzed the effects of SCG10 on the dynamic instability behavior of microtubules in vitro, both at steady state and early during microtubule polymerization. In contrast to stathmin, whose major action on dynamics is to destabilize microtubules by increasing the switching frequency from growth to shortening (the catastrophe frequency) at microtubule ends, SCG10 stabilized the plus ends both at steady state and early during polymerization by increasing the rate and extent of growth. For example, early during polymerization at high initial tubulin concentrations (20 microM), a low molar ratio of SCG10 to tubulin of 1:30 increased the growth rate by approximately 50%. In contrast to its effects at plus ends, SCG10 destabilized minus ends by increasing the shortening rate, the length shortened during shortening events, and the catastrophe frequency. Consistent with its ability to modulate microtubule dynamics at steady state, SCG10 bound to purified microtubules along their lengths. The dual activity of SCG10 at opposite microtubule ends may be important for its role in regulating growth cone microtubule dynamics. SCG10's ability to promote plus end growth may facilitate microtubule extension into filopodia, and its ability to destabilize minus ends could provide soluble tubulin for net plus end elongation.  相似文献   

3.
Plus-end-tracking proteins (+TIPs) are localized at the fast-growing, or plus end, of microtubules, and link microtubule ends to cellular structures. One of the best studied +TIPs is EB1, which forms comet-like structures at the tips of growing microtubules. The molecular mechanisms by which EB1 recognizes and tracks growing microtubule ends are largely unknown. However, one clue is that EB1 can bind directly to a microtubule end in the absence of other proteins. Here we use an in vitro assay for dynamic microtubule growth with two-color total-internal-reflection-fluorescence imaging to investigate binding of mammalian EB1 to both stabilized and dynamic microtubules. We find that under conditions of microtubule growth, EB1 not only tip tracks, as previously shown, but also preferentially recognizes the GMPCPP microtubule lattice as opposed to the GDP lattice. The interaction of EB1 with the GMPCPP microtubule lattice depends on the E-hook of tubulin, as well as the amount of salt in solution. The ability to distinguish different nucleotide states of tubulin in microtubule lattice may contribute to the end-tracking mechanism of EB1.  相似文献   

4.
A basic question concerning microtubule assembly is the polarity of growth, namely, whether subunits can add to either end of a growing microtubule or whether growth proceeds by subunit addition to only one end. To approach this question in an in vitro system, experiments were carried out on the addition of microtubule subunits to isolated flagellar axonemes. Flagella were detached from Chlamydomonas by brief treatment with non-ionic detergent, isolated by differential centrifugation, and incubated with crude high-speed extracts of porcine brain tissue or with purified tubulin (obtained by repetitive temperature-dependent assembly and disassembly). Electron microscopy of negatively stained samples showed as many as 11 long microtubules added at one end of more than 90% of the axonemes. Colchicine (100 μm), CaCl2 (2.5 mm), and low temperature (0 °C) both prevented and reversed microtubule assembly but had no effect on axonemal length. In crude extracts microtubules formed on both members of the axonemal central pair but on only the A-tubule of the outer doublets. Flagellar fragments, produced by mechanical shearing, were also incubated with microtubule subunit. Single tubules formed at only one end of outer doublet fragments; the appearance of single tubules on one or both members of central pair fragments was predominantly unidirectional. Structural analysis of frayed axonemes and the asymmetry of side-arm attachments permitted the absolute polarity of the axonemal fragments to be determined and revealed that assembly proceeded by addition of subunits to the distal ends of the axonemal microtubules. Using purified brain tubulin, a limited extent of proximal addition and growth on the B-tubule also occurred. The extent of proximal addition increased with increasing protein concentration and temperature. We conclude that the microtubules of flagella have an intrinsic polarity reflected in their side-arm attachments and in their directionality of growth.  相似文献   

5.
Liposomes are micro-compartments made of lipid bilayer membranes possessing the characteristics quite similar to those of biological membranes. To form artificial cell-like structures, we made liposomes that contained subunit proteins of cytoskeletons: tubulin or actin. Spherical liposomes were transformed into bipolar or cell-like shapes by mechanical forces generated by the polymerization of encapsulated subunits of microtubules. On the other hand, disk- or dumbbell-shaped liposomes were developed by the polymerization of encapsulated actin. Dynamic processes of morphological transformations of liposomes were visualized by high intensity dark-field light microscopy. Topological changes, such as fusion and division of membrane vesicles, play an essential role in cellular activities. To investigate the mechanism of these processes, we visualized the liposomes undergoing topological transformation in real time. A variety of novel topological transformations were found, including the opening-up of liposomes and the direct expulsion of inner vesicles.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Depolymerization kinetics of microtubules assembled to steady-state by pod ophyllotoxin treatment show a dose-dependent effect of this mitotic poison on the net rate of microtubule disassembly. Pulse-chase experiments with microtubules at steady-state indicate that the depolymerization effect induced by superstoichiometric concentrations of podophyllotoxin relative to tubulin is polar and time-dependent, i.e. the rate of tubulin loss decreases along with the time of treatment in the presence of the drug. Under these conditions the rate of microtubule disassembly is much faster than one could expect from a unique effect of drug-tubulin complex on the microtubule assembly end. Podophyllotoxin-tubulin complex is not able to induce active depolymerization of microtubules, while free podophyllotoxin is. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that this drug acts on the microtubule assembly-disassembly process by two different mechanisms: 1) as a free drug, it actively promotes polar depolymerization of microtubules, and 2) as a drug-tubulin complex, it retards the addition of subunits into the microtubule ends.  相似文献   

7.
We have investigated the effects of taxol on steady-state tubulin flux and on the apparent molecular rate constants for tubulin addition and loss at the two ends of bovine brain microtubules in vitro. These microtubules, which consist of a mixture of 70% tubulin and 30% microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), undergo a net addition of tubulin at one end of each microtubule (A end) and a precisely balanced net loss of tubulin at the opposite end (D end) at steady state in vitro. They do not exhibit to a detectable extent the "dynamic instability" behavior described recently for MAP-free microtubules, which would be evident as an increase in the mean microtubule length and a decrease in the number of microtubules in the suspensions [Mitchison, T., & Kirschner, M. (1984) Nature (London) 312, 237-242]. We used a double-label procedure in which microtubules were labeled with tritium and carbon-14 at A ends and carbon-14 at D ends to distinguish the two ends, combined with a microtubule collection procedure that permitted rapid and accurate analysis of retention of the two labels in the microtubules. We found that taxol slowed the flux of tubulin in a concentration-dependent manner, with 50% inhibition occurring between 5 and 7 microM drug. The effects of taxol on the apparent molecular rate constants for tubulin addition and loss at the two microtubule ends were determined by dilution analysis at an intermediate taxol concentration. The results indicated that taxol decreased the magnitudes of the dissociation rate constants at the two ends to similar extents, while exerting little effect on the association rate constants.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Background: Microtubules polymerized from pure tubulin show the unusual property of dynamic instability, in which both growing and shrinking polymers coexist at steady state. Shortly after its addition to a microtubule end, a tubulin subunit hydrolyzes its bound GTP. Studies with non-hydrolyzable analogs have shown that GTP hydrolysis is not required for microtubule assembly, but is essential for generating a dynamic polymer, in which the subunits at the growing tip have bound GTP and those in the bulk of the polymer have bound GDP. It has been suggested that loss of the ‘GTP cap’ through dissociation or hydrolysis exposes the unstable GDP core, leading to rapid depolymerization. However, evidence for a stabilizing cap has been very difficult to obtain.Results We developed an assay to determine the minimum GTP cap necessary to stabilize a microtubule from shrinking. Assembly of a small number of subunits containing a slowly hydrolyzed GTP analog (GMPCPP) onto the end of dynamic microtubules stabilized the polymer to dilution. By labeling the subunits with rhodamine, we measured the size of the cap and found that as few as 40 subunits were sufficient to stabilize a microtubule.Conclusion On the basis of statistical arguments, in which the proportion of stabilized microtubules is compared to the probability that when 40 GMPCPP-tubulin subunits have polymerized onto a microtubule end, all protofilaments have added at least one GMPCPP-tubulin subunit, our measurements of cap size support a model in which a single GTP subunit at the end of each of the 13 protofilaments of a microtubule is sufficient for stabilization. Depolymerization of a microtubule may be initiated by an exposed tubulin–GDP subunit at even a single position. These results have implications for the structure of microtubules and their means of regulation.  相似文献   

9.
J. C. Hoffman  K. C. Vaughn 《Protoplasma》1995,186(3-4):169-182
Summary Acetylation and tyrosinization are post-translational modifications of tubulin generally associated, respectively, with highly stable or dynamic microtubule arrays in animals and protists. Little is known of these modifications in land plants, however. We examined the presence and distribution of post-translational tubulin modifications in developing spermatogenous cells of the pteridophyteCeratopteris richardii by immunofluorescence and immunogold, utilizing antibodies specific for acetylated and tyrosinated tubulin. Acetylated tubulin is found in mid to late stage spermatogenous cells in stable microtubule configurations: the spline, flagella, and basal bodies. Tyrosinated tubulin, a modification associated with dynamic microtubule arrays, is also present in these structures as well as all other microtubules in the cell. The lamellar strip of the multilayered structure, a body previously described as tubulin-containing, was not labelled by any of the tubulin antibodies or antiserum. Treatment of cultures with the microtubule stabilizer taxol results in the appearance of new arrays of microtubules, including bundles in the cytoplasm. Only those new taxol-induced microtubule arrays present in mid to late stage cells (i.e., those with other normally acetylated tubulin arrays) have acetylated domains. Younger spermatogenous cells had similar microtubule bundles but no acetylated tubulin. Tyrosinated tubulin was found in all these taxol-stabilized arrays. These data indicate that, although these pteridophyte cells have the ability to acetylate tubulin, that this ability is limited to stages after the final spermatogenous cell mitosis and is limited to the highly stable spline and flagella microtubules.Abbreviations LS lamellar strip of multilayered structure - MTOC microtubule organizing center  相似文献   

10.
Liposomes are micro-compartments made of lipid bilayer membranes withcharacteristics quite similar to those of biological membranes. To formartificial cell-like structures, we generated liposomes that containedsubunit proteins of cytoskeletons: tubulin or actin. Spherical liposomeswere transformed into bipolar or cell-like shapes by mechanical forcesgenerated by the polymerization of encapsulated subunits of microtubules.Disk- or dumbbell-shaped liposomes were developed by the polymerizationof encapsulated actin. Dynamic processes of morphological transformationsof liposomes were visualized by high intensity dark-field lightmicroscopy.Topological changes, such as fusion and division of membrane vesicles,play an essential role in cellular activities. To investigate themechanism of these processes, we visualized in real time the liposomesundergoing topological transformation. A variety of novel topologicaltransformations were found, including the opening-up of liposomes and thedirect expulsion of inner vesicles.  相似文献   

11.
At low concentrations, vinblastine binds rapidly and reversibly to a very limited number of high affinity sites on steady-state bovine brain microtubules (mean Kd, 1.9 × 10?6m; 16.8 ± 4.3 vinblastine binding sites per microtubule) which appear to be located at one or both ends of the microtubules. At high concentrations, vinblastine binds to a high binding capacity class of sites of undetermined affinity, located on helical strands of protofilaments which form at the ends of depolymerizing microtubules, and/or along the surface of the microtubules. Substoichiometric inhibition of microtubule assembly, which occurs at low vinblastine concentrations, appears to be due to the binding of vinblastine to the high affinity class of sites. Fifty per cent inhibition of tubulin addition to the net assembly ends of steady-state microtubules occurred at 1.38 × 10?7m-drug, and at this concentration, 1.16 ± 0.27 molecules of vinblastine were bound to the high affinity class of sites. Vinblastine appeared to bind directly to the microtubule ends, and our results indicate that vinblastine inhibits the assembly of steady-state bovine brain microtubules by binding rapidly and with high affinity to one or two molecules of tubulin at the net assembly ends. Splaying and peeling of protofilaments at microtubule ends and the active depolymerization of microtubules occurred only at vinblastine concentrations greater than 1 × 10?6 to 2 × 10?6m. This action of vinblastine is associated with and may be due to the binding of vinblastine to the high capacity class of sites. Both actions of vinblastine may be due to the binding of vinblastine to the same binding sites on the tubulin molecule, with the sites exhibiting either a high or low affinity depending upon the location in the microtubule.  相似文献   

12.
The microtubule cytoskeleton provides essential structural support for all eukaryotic cells and can be assembled into various higher order structures that perform drastically different functions. Understanding how microtubule-containing assemblies are built in a spatially and temporally controlled manner is therefore fundamental to understanding cell physiology. Toxoplasma gondii, a protozoan parasite, contains at least five distinct tubulin-containing structures, the spindle pole, centrioles, cortical microtubules, the conoid, and the intra-conoid microtubules. How these five structurally and functionally distinct sets of tubulin containing structures are constructed and maintained in the same cell is an intriguing problem. Previously, we performed a proteomic analysis of the T. gondii apical complex, a cytoskeletal complex located at the apical end of the parasite that is composed of the conoid, three ring-like structures, and the two short intra-conoid microtubules. Here we report the characterization of one of the proteins identified in that analysis, TgICMAP1. We show that TgICMAP1 is a novel microtubule binding protein that can directly bind to microtubules in vitro and stabilizes microtubules when ectopically expressed in mammalian cells. Interestingly, in T. gondii, TgICMAP1 preferentially binds to the intra-conoid microtubules, providing us the first molecular tool to investigate the intra-conoid microtubule assembly process during daughter construction.  相似文献   

13.
The current two-state GTP cap model of microtubule dynamic instability proposes that a terminal crown of GTP-tubulin stabilizes the microtubule lattice and promotes elongation while loss of this GTP-tubulin cap converts the microtubule end to shortening. However, when this model was directly tested by using a UV microbeam to sever axoneme-nucleated microtubules and thereby remove the microtubule's GTP cap, severed plus ends rapidly shortened, but severed minus ends immediately resumed elongation (Walker, R.A., S. Inoué, and E.D. Salmon. 1989. J. Cell Biol. 108: 931–937).

To determine if these previous results were dependent on the use of axonemes as seeds or were due to UV damage, or if they instead indicate an intermediate state in cap dynamics, we performed UV cutting of self-assembled microtubules and mechanical cutting of axoneme-nucleated microtubules. These independent methods yielded results consistent with the original work: a significant percentage of severed minus ends are stable after cutting. In additional experiments, we found that the stability of both severed plus and minus ends could be increased by increasing the free tubulin concentration, the solution GTP concentration, or by assembling microtubules with guanylyl-(α,β)-methylene-diphosphonate (GMPCPP).

Our results show that stability of severed ends, particularly minus ends, is not an artifact, but instead reveals the existence of a metastable kinetic intermediate state between the elongation and shortening states of dynamic instability. The kinetic properties of this intermediate state differ between plus and minus ends. We propose a three-state conformational cap model of dynamic instability, which has three structural states and four transition rate constants, and which uses the asymmetry of the tubulin heterodimer to explain many of the differences in dynamic instability at plus and minus ends.

  相似文献   

14.
Mitotic movements of chromosomes are usually coupled to the elongation and shortening of the microtubules to which they are bound. The lengths of kinetochore-associated microtubules change by incorporation or loss of tubulin subunits, principally at their chromosome-bound ends. We have reproduced aspects of this phenomenon in vitro, using a real-time assay that displays directly the movements of individual chromosome-associated microtubules as they elongate and shorten. Chromosomes isolated from cultured Chinese hamster ovary cells were adhered to coverslips and then allowed to bind labeled microtubules. In the presence of tubulin and GTP, these microtubules could grow at their chromosome-bound ends, causing the labeled segments to move away from the chromosomes, even in the absence of ATP. Sometimes a microtubule would switch to shortening, causing the direction of movement to change abruptly. The link between a microtubule and a chromosome was mechanically strong; 15 pN of tension was generally insufficient to detach a microtubule, even though it could add subunits at the kinetochore–microtubule junction. The behavior of the microtubules in vitro was regulated by the chromosomes to which they were bound; the frequency of transitions from polymerization to depolymerization was decreased, and the speed of depolymerization-coupled movement toward chromosomes was only one-fifth the rate of shortening for microtubules free in solution. Our results are consistent with a model in which each microtubule interacts with an increasing number of chromosome-associated binding sites as it approaches the kinetochore.  相似文献   

15.
Enhancement of tubulin assembly as monitored by a rapid filtration assay   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The early kinetics of microtubule formation from lamb brain tubulin isolated by affinity chromatography can be followed by a newly developed filter assay. The rapid collection of microtubules on glass fiber filters permits the calculation of the moles of tubulin polymerized. The filter assay gives both a rate and extent of polymerization that are identical to those obtained by turbidity or sedimentation analysis, respectively. The microtubules trapped by the filter are readily depolymerized by cold (t12= 3 min) and slowly by colchicine (t1/2= 32min). Tubulin purified by affinity chromatography requires a high protein concentration (>4 mg/ml) for polymerization. Although 5m glycerol allows polymerization to occur at tubulin concentrations below 2 mg/ml, the maximum amount of microtubule formation is observed at low tubulin concentration when microtubule-associated proteins are present. These proteins are not retained by the affinity resin; however, they can be eluted from diethylaminoethyl-Sephadex by solutions containing 0.3m KCl. Microtubule-associated proteins enhance both the rate of polymerization and the total amount of tubulin polymerized as assessed by the filter assay, suggesting that they are involved in both initiation and elongation of microtubules.  相似文献   

16.
Although the actin network is commonly hijacked by pathogens, there are few reports of parasites targeting microtubules. The proposed member of the LcrE protein family from some Chlamydia species (e.g. pCopN from C. pneumoniae) binds tubulin and inhibits microtubule assembly in vitro. From the pCopN structure and its similarity with that of MxiC from Shigella, we definitively confirm CopN as the Chlamydia homolog of the LcrE family of bacterial proteins involved in the regulation of type III secretion. We have also investigated the molecular basis for the pCopN effect on microtubules. We show that pCopN delays microtubule nucleation and acts as a pure tubulin-sequestering protein at steady state. It targets the β subunit interface involved in the tubulin longitudinal self-association in a way that inhibits nucleotide exchange. pCopN contains three repetitions of a helical motif flanked by disordered N- and C-terminal extensions. We have identified the pCopN minimal tubulin-binding region within the second and third repeats. Together with the intriguing observation that C. trachomatis CopN does not bind tubulin, our data support the notion that, in addition to the shared function of type III secretion regulation, these proteins have evolved different functions in the host cytosol. Our results provide a mechanistic framework for understanding the C. pneumoniae CopN-specific inhibition of microtubule assembly.  相似文献   

17.
Radio-iodination of tubulin can be achieved by Bolton-Hunter reagent both in the absence and presence of microtubule associated proteins. Specific radioactivities as high as 400 Ci/mmole tubulin dimer can be obtained, i.e. an average of 0.2 molecule of reagent is bound per molecule of tubulin. About 80 % of the [125I]- labelled tubulin keeps its ability to assemble in microtubules and polymerizes with the same critical concentration as the native tubulin, which makes the method adequate for preparing tracer tubulin useful for in vivo and in vitro studies. Both α and β subunits are labelled, 60 % of the radiolabel being bound to the β subunit.  相似文献   

18.
Microtubule organization of mouse splenic lymphocytes was investigated by immunofluorescence microscopy using specific tubulin antibody. Each resting lymphocyte was shown to contain well organized microtubules which are associated with a microtubule organization center at one end. Microtubule organization of lymphocytes was readily modulated during patch and cap formation of surface immunoglobulins. These modulations induced by antibodies directed against immunoglobulins were prevented when the cells were incubated with 100 μg ml?1 of concanavalin A before the addition of antibodies. A modulation of microtubule organization was also detected when incubated in hypertonic medium where cap formation of various receptors was nonspecifically induced in the absence of ligand. The degree to which microtubule organization was modulated, however, was larger in cap formation induced with antibodies than in ligand-independent cap formation, probably because the latter does not require specific patch formation. On the cells forming cap in hypertonic medium, strong staining with tubulin antibody was observed beneath the cap, but the region of cap itself was not stained with tubulin antibody. A mitogenic dose of ConA did not readily induce any significant alteration of staining patterns with tubulin antibody but caused extreme changes in microtubule organization of lymphocytes after incubation for 48 hr. Growing lymphoma cells were shown to have poorly ordered microtubules and related structures. These results seem to suggest that the modulations of microtubule organization in lymphocytes are associated with cell surface events and cell growth.  相似文献   

19.
Current models for the intracellular transport of Tau protein suggest motor protein-dependent co-transport with microtubule fragments and diffusion of Tau in the cytoplasm, whereas Tau is believed to be stationary while bound to microtubules and in equilibrium with free diffusion in the cytosol. Observations that members of the microtubule-dependent kinesin family show Brownian motion along microtubules led us to hypothesize that diffusion along microtubules could also be relevant in the case of Tau. We used single-molecule total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to probe for diffusion of individual fluorescently labeled Tau molecules along microtubules. This allowed us to avoid the problem that microtubule-dependent diffusion could be masked by excess of labeled Tau in solution that might occur in in vivo overexpression experiments. We found that approximately half of the individually detected Tau molecules moved bidirectionally along microtubules over distances up to several micrometers. Diffusion parameters such as diffusion coefficient, interaction time, and scanned microtubule length did not change with Tau concentration. Tau binding and diffusion along the microtubule lattice, however, were sensitive to ionic strength and pH and drastically reduced upon enzymatic removal of the negatively charged C termini of tubulin. We propose one-dimensional Tau diffusion guided by the microtubule lattice as one possible additional mechanism for Tau distribution. By such one-dimensional microtubule lattice diffusion, Tau could be guided to both microtubule ends, i.e. the sites where Tau is needed during microtubule polymerization, independently of directed motor-dependent transport. This could be important in conditions where active transport along microtubules might be compromised.  相似文献   

20.
Microtubule protein of >95% purity has been isolated by self-assembly from concentrated cell extracts of myxamoebae of Physarum polycephalum. Ninety-eight percent of the amoebal microtubule protein was tubulin. Both a and β subunits of amoebal tubulin were different from neurotubulin α and β subunits, but very similar to those of Tetrahymena ciliary tubulin. The non-tubulin components, which co-purified with tubulin through three assembly cycles, were essential to microtubule formation and contained several polypeptides including some of apparent molecular weights 49000, 57000 and 59000. Purified amoebal microtubule protein formed microtubules on warming in the absence of glycerol which were cold- and Ca2+-labile. In vitro, microtubule assembly was inhibited by vinblastine, benzimidazole derivatives and griseofulvin, but not by 10?4 M colchicine. Amoebal tubulin had a much lower affinity than neurotubulin for colchicine.  相似文献   

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